A machine shop employee claimed that her employer was not paying her for skills she had obtained under a job training incentive program. Five years after first complaining to her union, the employee still had not received any skill-based pay increase and filed suit against the union for failure to represent her interests and against the company for breach of the collective bargaining agreement. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, holding that the employee’s claims were barred by the six month statute of limitations applicable to claims under Section 301 of the Labor Management Relations Act (“LMRA”), 29 U.S.C. § 185(a). We now affirm the district court’s decision.
Background
Since 1972, Virginia Christiansen has worked as a machinist for APV Crepaco (“APV”), a manufacturer of food processing equipment in Lake Mills, Wisconsin. In 1991, AVP and Christiansen’s union, Blackhawk Local 957 (“Local 957”) negotiated a learn-to-earn program (“program”) which allowed employees to qualify for higher pay by acquiring certain “skill blocks.” That year Christiansen, who normally operated a polishing lathe, received five hours of training on a # 17 grinder. At that time, no formal requirements had been established for determining whether an employee had attained a new skill block for purposes of the program. Athough her instructor never signed off on her ability (a requirement of the program starting in 1992), a “Machining Skills Matrix” posted by the union at AVP had an “x” displayed next to Christiansen’s name in the column marked # 17 grinder. Christian-sen took this to mean she had attained that skill block. 1 When she received no pay increase in late 1991 or early 1992, Christiansen complained to her union shop steward who promised to look into it and get back to her. The steward apparently did nothing and a year later she complained to a different steward. Again, she got no response, and no grievance was filed by the union on her behalf. This continued for the next five years with four different stewards. Finally, in 1996, Christiansen went directly to the learn-to-earn program committee (made up of union members) and demanded the extra pay for the grinder skills she attained in 1991.
The committee maintained that she had not received sufficient training, but said
On June 3, 1997, Christiansen filed a hybrid Section 301 claim against Local 957 claiming the union breached its duty to fairly represent her interests, and against APV for breaching the collective bargaining agreement. In addition, she filed a Title VII claim against APV claiming men had been more favorably treated under the learn-to-earn program than women.
After the defendants moved for summary judgment, the district court held that the Section 301 claims were barred by the applicable six month statute of limitations.
See DelCostello v. Teamsters,
Discussion
The sole issue on appeal is whether the court correctly disposed of Christiansen’s Section 301 claim on summary judgment as time barred. We review the grant of summary judgment de novo,
Anderson v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
Accrual Date
The statute of limitations for a Section 301 claim begins to run “when the claimant discovers, or in the exercise of reasonable diligence should have discovered, the acts constituting the alleged [violation].”
Metz v. Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc.,
We cannot accept Christiansen’s argument. This court has held that when a collective bargaining agreement requires that all grievances be brought within a certain period, “under the terms of the collective bargaining agreement, the failure and refusal of the Union to file the grievance within the specified time amounted to a final decision.”
Metz v. Tootsie Roll Industries, Inc.,
We believe Christiansen’s suit is untimely for the same reasons. First, the collective bargaining agreement between APV and the union specified that all grievances be brought within seven days of the offending occurrence. By failing to file Christiansen’s grievance within that period, Local 957 made a final decision about it some time in 1991.
Id.
Second, Christian-sen should reasonably have become aware of the union’s 1991 decision well before December 3, 1996.
Pantoja v. Holland Motor Exp., Inc.,
The fact that the union did not directly notify Christiansen that it failed to file her grievance in 1991 is not itself a bar to accrual: “The appellant cannot be allowed to sit back and claim a lack of notice in light of circumstances such as these ... This result is consistent with the strong federal policy favoring prompt resolution of labor disputes.”
4
Metz,
Nonetheless, the plaintiff maintains that our holding in
Metz
is distinguishable, and therefore not controlling. She argues that unlike in
Metz,
where the plaintiffs discharge was a single discrete violation of the collective bargaining agreement at issue,
see
As to the union, this circuit has clearly held that “continued union inactivity after an initial failure to respond to a grievance request does not constitute a continuing violation of the duty of fair representation.”
Adams v. Budd Co.,
Thus, because Christiansen either knew or should have known that Local 957 had not processed her grievance in 1991, and she has not established a continuing violation sufficient to extend the limitations period, her claim was untimely in 1997.
Tolling
Christiansen’s final argument is that even if the limitations period did start to run in 1991, it should have been tolled while she sought help from successive union stewards concerning her grievance. She correctly cites
Frandsen v. Bhd. of Railway, Airline and Steamship Clerks,
for the proposition that, in failure to represent claims, the statute of limitations is tolled while the plaintiff exhausts internal union grievance procedures, even when those procedures ultimately prove futile.
Local 957’s constitution sets up an internal procedure which requires the fifing of a written description of the alleged misconduct with the international union president. It is undisputed that Christiansen never attempted to invoke this procedure. Instead, she informally sought the assistance of her local union stewards. We have held that similar behavior is insufficient to toll the statute of limitations.
See Pantoja,
Conclusion
Because the plaintiff has failed to bring her claim within six months of its accrual, and the limitations period was not tolled, the district court correctly dismissed her suit. We therefore Affirm its decision.
Notes
. Local 957 insists that the matrix only indicated which employees have operated certain machines and had nothing to do with the learn-to-earn program.
. The district court correctly held that in a hybrid Section 301 claim, the claims against the employer and against the union are interdependent.
See Metz v. Tootsie Roll Industries,
. The court also held that Christiansen's Title VII claim was time untimely. She does not appeal that decision.
. We do not condone the union’s alleged failure to give Christiansen actual notice of its decision not to file a grievance on her behalf. Indeed, unions should be encouraged to notify their members of grievance decisions as soon as possible.
See Metz,
. The situation would obviously be different if Christiansen was learning new skills and each time she acquired one the employer failed to reward her under the learn-to-earn program. In that case, each denial would give rise to a new claim and together the denials would make up a continuing pattern.
See Bryan Manufacturing,
. Local 957 and APV maintain that they are entitled to summary judgment on the merits of Christiansen's Section 301 claim. Because we hold that the claim is untimely, we need not address this question.
